For I was the lucky photographer who happened to be at the museum when a golden eagle was brought through its doors.

Western toads are among the many native animals on public view at the Lindsay Wildlife Museum. Photo: Elaine Miller Bond

She (the eagle turned out to be female) was found earlier that morning, grounded, muddy, and suffering from a wing injury. She needed the kind of hospital care that the Lindsay Wildlife Museum provides.

What’s more, Lindsay staff invited me behind the scenes, into its busy hospital room, to photograph the eagle during the earliest stage of her treatment. I happily obliged and was allowed to set up my tripod just a few feet from the veterinary team at work.

Of the more than 5,500 sick and injured animals that the Lindsay Wildlife Museum treats in its hospital each year, only 5 to 10 are golden eagles.

And this eagle, unlike most others, seemed to have a good prognosis.

I left the museum with my fingers crossed, hoping for a healthy outcome.

Another layer to the story developed when I arrived home and opened my email. According to the museum, the eagle was wearing a radio-telemetry pack — a device that scientists use to track the movements of wild animals — when she was found.

So this was not just “any” eagle. Somebody in the scientific community must have known this bird. Maybe that person knew the nest in which she had hatched or the flyways she had wandered. Most certainly, the person would care about what had happened.

I crossed the fingers on my other hand and eagerly waited to learn more.

Six weeks later, good news appeared in my inbox. Despite a serious liver infection, the eagle had made a complete recovery. And I was invited to photograph her release back to the wild.

The eagle was universally described as “feisty.” Here, she showed her enthusiasm over her final physical exam. Photo: Elaine Miller Bond

I didn’t know what to expect. So I arrived at the release site — the beautiful Las Trampas Regional Wilderness in San Ramon — very excited and very early.

Another early bird was Daniel Driscoll, biologist with the American Eagle Research Institute in Arizona.

He, in fact, “met” this particular eagle before, in 2013, when she was a chick in the nest. He was also the expert who had outfitted her with the tracking device.

The same bird! In this photo, the eagle was an 8.5-week-old chick. Scientists, like wildlife consultant Joseph DiDonato (shown here), knew her exact age, because they had been monitoring her nest. Photo: Elaine Miller Bond

From the device, biologists learned that the eagle had traveled far — from her nest in the Los Vaqueros Reservoir near Livermore, to the Transverse Ranges north of Los Angeles, to the Coast Ranges east of San Luis Obispo, and back.

By equipping the eagle with a new telemetry pack, scientists hoped to learn more about her flight patterns after she returned to the wild.

Doug Bell from East Bay Regional Parks (left) holds the eagle while Daniel Driscoll (with long hair) affixes a new tracking device to the eagle before it is returned to the wild. Onlookers included volunteers, children, and members from the multi-organizational team who coordinated the eagle’s care and release. Photo: Elaine Miller Bond

Such information might help the human community find better ways to live in harmony with large migrating birds, like golden eagles.

This would be especially important in our region. The Coast Ranges of the greater San Francisco Bay Area (particularly the eastern area) are home to the largest population of golden eagles on earth, according to the Los Vaqueros Reservoir and Watershed.

Our area also presents serious, often fatal hazards. Wind-turbine strikes, for example, are by far the leading cause of golden eagle admissions to the Lindsay Museum’s hospital.

“Open wide.” Guthrum Purdin, D.V.M., assisted by Marianne Dominguez, conducts a final check before the eagle takes flight. Golden feathers on the bird’s neck give the species its name. Photo: Elaine Miller BondTo document the eagle’s age, biologists photographed her wing and tail feathers. It was thought that a white stain on one of the feathers had resulted from a skunk spray. Weeks later, her fragrance was still detectable. Photo: Elaine Miller Bond

But this day was all about happiness. And I felt inspired, seeing all the people who cared.

Berkeley wildlife

In 2104, the wildlife hospital treated 159 animals that were found in Berkeley, from songbirds and snakes to opossums and raptors. Twenty-five animals were released in Berkeley.

For more about the Lindsay Wildlife Museum, please visit its website. It is home to the nation’s first wildlife rehabilitation hospital and is celebrating its 60th anniversary next year. It is also accepting donations, since wild animals in need of care don’t have health insurance.

Elaine Miller Bond is the photographer for the book, ‘The Utah Prairie Dog: Life Among the Red Rocks,’ recently published by the University of Utah Press. She is also the author of ‘Dream Affimals: Affirmations + Animals’ (Sunstone Press, 2013) and Affimals (LIT Verlag, 2009).

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